74 The most vibrant resort on Barbados has its quiet corners, too. Find yours, at Marriott's Sam Lord's Castle. Aye} a casrle. A self-contained resort WIth 259 terraced guest rooms. The 72-acre estate includes a mile of beach for sunrung} 7 lIghted tennis courts} 3 pools, 3 restaurants} a beach cafe} and live enterta1I1ment nighrly For reservations} call your travel agent or 800-228-9290. QrriomeSam Lords Castle St. Philip Parish} Barbados} West Indies NATURAL COLOR & CLASS Smooth and crisp, peifect for blouses, dresses, the chIc-est safari suit ever. 38" wide. A special buy from BRITEX- BY- MAIL, $6.99 yard. Minimum order 3 yards. Order from Dept. NY1-26. Please include $3 handling and postage- CA residents add sales tax. VISA, Master Card, or AmerIcan Express (gIve acct. # and exp_ date). Offer good through February 28, 1981. Ask about our BRITEX-BY- MAIL personalized swatch service BRITEX FABRICS / 146 GEARY Sl: /147 MAIDEN LANE, SAN FRANCISCO /94108 . . m . ... ... .. . .. I1ii .. JANUAI\Y 26,1981 also a figure of great glamour; perhaps some of her authority resided in that. T.S. and I would knock on the door and go into her bedroom each morning to say goodbye before we went to school. Hanging over the elegant headboard of her bed would be the black silk eyeshade she wore so as not to be awakened by early-morning light. She would have on a long robe of soft, velvety stuff. On the wall over the fireplace was a painting of a woman, seen from behind, seated in an armchair and showing her nude back, arms, and shoulders. Her hair was piled up on top of her head, drawing one's gaze to the long nape of her neck Hair and head from the rear looked like Eloise's, and Otto had bought the picture (which was by Eu- gene Speicher) for that reason. I would look at this picture as I chatted with Eloise, buttoned my jacket or finished tying my shoes, told her what I'd had for breakfast, and promised that, yes, I would remember to write to my parents that afternoon after school, before I went out to play. In one corner of the room was a prie- dieu, with an embroidered armrest and knee rest, at which Eloise presumably knelt to pray before she went to bed at night. As in Otto's room, there were two doors besides the one we had come in by: one led to a dressing room, with two rows of mirror-fronted closets facing each other, and thence to the bathroom, with a sliding glass door over the bath to keep shower water in; the other door led to the upper screened porch, over the living room, and thence to Otto's room. Eloise was (and still is) an orga- nizer. Having organized the household and arrangements for the children (Marna, the Spaeths' adolescent daughter, was at school in Cincinnati, and Debbie, who was two years older than I, in Tucson, Arizona), she had time for good works. (She told me later, "My mother said that if I never learned to cook I'd never have to.") She organized Dayton's reception of me and my fellow-evacuees. She orga- nized entertainment for wounded ser- vicemen recuperating in Dayton hos- pi tals, and read books to blinded air- men; my mother had sent her Alice Duer Miller's verse story "The White Cliffs," which proved useful as read- ing matter. (It told of a Rhode Island girl who marries a young English landowner. He is killed in the First W orld War, leaving his wife and son -who grows up to go off and fight in the Second World War. At one point